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There's already one there. Open the page in Firefox, only Firefox lets you do this, then right click and go 'Select all, than again and do "View selection source', then find 'Stunning and simple' and you will see it. But you have to find it in the .css to change its style.

There's already one there. Open the page in Firefox, only Firefox lets you do this, then right click and go 'Select all, than again and do "View selection source', then find 'Stunning and simple' and you will see it. But you have to find it in the .css to change its style.

In any browser other than Firefox just view source or if you need to see how the browser interprets the HTML then open the built in developer tools.

The "stunning and simple" is the default product description stop. I am looking to add text below the 2 smaller pictures below the main bigger picture. Is there a way to tell the .php page that is being pulled in here? I thought it would be wpsc-single_product.php but is there a way to tell using firebug?

In that file you see an imagecol class which is the big and little pictures div, so I though adding a div or p below that would do it but maybe I am in the wrong spot...

Other browsers will not show you the javascript build on the page, they will only show the 'bare' source.

All browsers except Firefox will show you everything in the web page the way the browser has interpreted it (including all the JavaScript) if you go into the Developer Tools. You can even have it step through any JavaScript one statement at a time and examine all the values.

Internet Explorer and Chrome - press F12.
Opera - press CTRL-Shift-I.

Firefox is the only popular browser that doesn't have proper developer tools built in and relies on extensions instead to add the functionality provided native in other browsers.

All browsers except Firefox will show you everything in the web page the way the browser has interpreted it (including all the JavaScript) if you go into the Developer Tools. You can even have it step through any JavaScript one statement at a time and examine all the values.

Internet Explorer and Chrome - press F12.
Opera - press CTRL-Shift-I.

Firefox is the only popular browser that doesn't have proper developer tools built in and relies on extensions instead to add the functionality provided native in other browsers.

Well, sorry about that, it's nice to know about, I have used that feature before but did not know it could do all those things, and I still like the Firefox way because I can see the entire page source in fullscreen. And thank you for that information.

The code for those images is actually in the code you posted at the top of the thread.It isn't referencing a different file, you have already found the right one with that post.

Since all of the PHP runs on the server and only delivers the final HTML to the browser there is no way to tell using any browser tools as to which file particular content was included from. It just happens that the file you are looking for that displays the two images is the one you posted at the start of the thread.

The code for those images is actually in the code you posted at the top of the thread.It isn't referencing a different file, you have already found the right one with that post.

Since all of the PHP runs on the server and only delivers the final HTML to the browser there is no way to tell using any browser tools as to which file particular content was included from. It just happens that the file you are looking for that displays the two images is the one you posted at the start of the thread.

Thats what I thought. So I inserted my paragraph (below) but nothing shows up and the source code has no record of it when using Firebug.. Which is why I thought maybe I was in the wrong file for some reason. Any idea?!?

Code:

</div><!--close imagecol-->
<p>Please keep in mind that due to differences in computer monitors, colors may differ slightly from the picture. They are even better in person!</p>
<div class="productcol">